Just one word of simple advice-it is not the hours your study, but how efficiently you are using your studying sessions that counts. For example, it is not much use procrastinating over a difficult question for an hour and then say you have studied an hour-because you have not achieved great efficiency/understanding in this study session. So make sure that you are studying at times that optimises your alertness and concentration and that you evaluate your own study skills and understanding based on the breath as well as depth of knowledge that you have gained for each of your subject, and you test that by regularly doing exam papers/questions/sections under EXAM CONDITIONS- all my best wishes to 2014 HSC students and I hope you guys will be using your summer holidays very efficiently and wisely to study and relaxHow many hours do you study in a day?
How much do you plan to study in the Summer Holidays/What do you plan to do?
I don't have a set requirement of how many hours I do. Ideally, it hovers around 3-4 hours a night on school nights and around 8-10 hours a day on the weekend. Keep in mind, by "study" I am referring to homework, assessment prep, etc. The type of "study" I do is dependent on my subject. For example, English would be looking at practice analysis and whatever.How many hours do you study in a day?
How much do you plan to study in the Summer Holidays/What do you plan to do?
+1 couldn't have said it better myself.Just one word of simple advice-it is not the hours your study, but how efficiently you are using your studying sessions that counts. For example, it is not much use procrastinating over a difficult question for an hour and then say you have studied an hour-because you have not achieved great efficiency/understanding in this study session. So make sure that you are studying at times that optimises your alertness and concentration and that you evaluate your own study skills and understanding based on the breath as well as depth of knowledge that you have gained for each of your subject, and you test that by regularly doing exam papers/questions/sections under EXAM CONDITIONS- all my best wishes to 2014 HSC students and I hope you guys will be using your summer holidays very efficiently and wisely to study and relax
I think your school night hours are proportional to your aims, but 10 hours on the weekend is extreme, and unnecessary. I understand it if you're being inefficient and you just do your homework in short bursts over the span of the day, but if you're doing 8-10 hours of serious study, that's too much.I don't have a set requirement of how many hours I do. Ideally, it hovers around 3-4 hours a night on school nights and around 8-10 hours a day on the weekend. Keep in mind, by "study" I am referring to homework, assessment prep, etc. The type of "study" I do is dependent on my subject. For example, English would be looking at practice analysis and whatever.
These holidays I have 2-3 weeks off overseas, but I will study (haha) and try and finish all the notes I was supposed to do this term and essentially get ahead and learn everything for the next year.
I'm planning to do around 4-5 hours study a day, depending on whether or not I go out. I will try and socialise 2-3 times a week to keep sane, but I will be spending a lot of time working on subjects like English, which will eat up a large amount of my time, and subjects with major works, I.e. va.
I think what you need to do in the holidays is dependent on the subjects you do.
Best of luck )
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
It's not 10 hours of intensive study, I would just like to point that out haha. It's like a decent continuous effort. If you were to compress into intensive study, it would probably be like 5-6 hours.I think your school night hours are proportional to your aims, but 10 hours on the weekend is extreme, and unnecessary. I understand it if you're being inefficient and you just do your homework in short bursts over the span of the day, but if you're doing 8-10 hours of serious study, that's too much.
4-5 hours for the holidays is good though.
^ thisYou shouldnt really study to a time, study should be more goal oriented. Those goals and the exact amount of time it takes you to achieve them are really dependent on the student (i.e. their aims, the study techniques which work best for them and their capabilities. I know this sounds like a cop-out answer, but it really is difficult to answer because it varies so much from person to person.